ORIGINAL: RCKen
You don't want to use CA because that's just going to make a mess. You'll end up with CA all over the place and possibly fog up the covering. The acetone activates the adhesive on the monokote which adheres it to the covering below. Any excess acetone can easily been cleaned up off of the covering without any mess.
Ken
One area to watch for though is little puckers in the covering. My first attempt using the windex and sealing the edges with acetone gave me a couple suspirses. First, getting large pieces of trim to follow the flow over ribs was a problem. I finally got things down with the exception of a couple areas where the trim would just not conform to the coverning. I let things dry up for a couple days and then used a capilary tube and acitone and sealed the edges. Where the covering has the small puckers, the acitone sucked under the covering. I put some pressure on the pucker and held it down for the acitone to evaporate. When I lifted the pressure, I discovered that I had pressed out the color. The acitone had softened the adheasive, which is the color on Monokote. The pressure squirted the adheasive out and left a clear cover in that area. Now, I use a trim iron to shrink down these little puckers and then do the acitone for the final seal.
Don